Ryan to Deliver Speech on Conservative Solutions to Poverty

GRAND JUNCTION, Colo.-- Just two weeks before voters cast their ballots, Paul Ryan will try out a new argument: The Republican ticket will do more to help the poor. He will spell out a conservative, non-government-focused model for addressing poverty.

According to a Ryan aide, the GOP vice presidential candidate will use a speech in Cleveland on Wednesday to "make the case that Americans stuck in poverty cannot afford four more years like the last four and that Mitt Romney offers a better pathway for low-income Americans to improve their lives through opportunity and upward mobility than the failed policies of President Obama."

At this time of the campaign, candidates are usually trying to squeeze in as much campaigning as possible as opposed to laying out a policy address, but four years ago Sarah Palin also gave a series of policy addresses in the final days, including one on support for families of special needs children.

Democrats have attacked Ryan's various budget plans, which propose drastic across-the-board government spending cuts, because they would reduce funding for social programs. And leaders in the Catholic Church, of which Ryan is a member, have repudiated Ryan's proposal, particularly expected cuts to food stamp (SNAP) benefits for this reason.

Mitt Romney probably didn't help matters when he said, in a leaked video from a $50,000-a-head fundraising dinner in Boca Raton, that
"47 percent" of people who don't pay income taxes will never vote for him because they are "dependent" and "victims."

And Ryan has added to that perception: The campaign suffered a photo-op misstep when he was criticized for appearing to scrub clean pots at a soup kitchen in Youngstown, Ohio. Ryan was accused of reaching for a photo instead of actually wanting to help homeless people.

But the aide said the issue of helping the homeless and people living in poverty is close to Ryan because of his mentor, Jack Kemp, who was known as a "bleeding heart conservative" and worked with the Republican Party and those working to eliminate poverty. In the early 1990s he was the chairman of the Economic Empowerment Task Force, a Cabinet subgroup formed to develop antipoverty policy.

Like Kemp, the aide says Ryan believes the federal government must work with those in "civil-society groups" on the "front lines of the poverty fight" who offer "more than just material support," but the "gift of human compassion."

Ryan touched on similar issues in a speech to Georgetown University in April, when he discussed upward mobility for the poor; it was meant as a rebuttal to Catholic criticism of his budget plan.